"What if when you go to the moon there's an asteroid, or something?"

As you may have guessed, this is not a trailer for an actual movie (not that we'd put it past Hollywood). But it is in an actual movie. According to Pajiba, this is from, of all things, Annie. The titular character and her foster dad go to see MoonQuake Lake, which is apparently a Twilight knock off in which Mila Kunis is from the moon, Ashton Kutcher is a handsome man, and Rihanna is some sort of snake mermaid.

You know, Home. The Home movie. No, not Home Movies! You know what, never mind.

While the film's being marketed right in line with a "play to the lowest denominator of kid humor" aesthetic, there's still something compelling about the little alien. Oh, not to mention his counterpart Tip, one of the rare leading ladies of color in a major children's animation feature.

I'm not a Boov, you're a Boov.

The official trailer for Dreamworks' new animated film Home has us pretty excited; not only does it feature a female lead, but she's also a kick-butt lady of color, voiced by Rihanna. Queen Rih as Tip seems so great that we can even forgive the fact that Tip's Boov friend, Oh, is voiced by Jim Parsons.

Just like I predicted on several occasions, YouTube's over-the-top, self-defensive copyright policy has been purposefully abused on a large scale in order to trick YouTube into haphazardly removing videos it had no business being worried about. A currently unknown person registered with the username iLCreation, hopped on YouTube and claimed copyright to each and every Justin Beiber music video. What do you think YouTube did? Took the copyright notifications of an exceedingly famous artist's every video 100% seriously and shut down Beiber's entireVevo channel without asking for any sort of proof of the claims. As if that weren't enough, a similar attack affected Rihanna, Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars.
It makes sense that YouTube enacts their policy this way in order to protect themselves, but this really lays bare how ridiculously extreme that policy is. If the process hadn't been automated and they had given even one second's thought to the situation, you'd think they might come to the conclusion that "Hey, about 5 pop superstars are participating in copyright infringement against one dude and he just noticed and thought to do something about it now, all at once? Hey, wait a minute...." Except that YouTube's all-complaints-are-true, automated copyright policy kept them from arriving at that second sentence.